Alabama teen sues NOPD over alleged beating

An
Alabama teenager who says he was beat up by New Orleans police during Mardi
Gras of 2012 says his civil rights were violated. A
federal lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges not only excessive force but also a
cover-up inside the 8th District police station.

Among
the defendants named in the federal civil rights suit are the city, a handful
of NOPD officers, the commander of the 8th District and NOPD Superintendent Ronal Serpas.

Attorneys for 19-year old Dylan Driggers filed the complaint in federal court
exactly one year after the alleged brutality. FOX
8 first spoke with the Alabama teen in May 2012 and he described his injuries.

"I had seven or eight knots on my head, bruises
on my back and a scrape on my head," Driggers told us. "But I could tell I had been bleeding and my
nose had been bleeding."

Driggers says he was roughed up after being arrested on Bourbon Street. He
claims Lt. Mike Field, a "Sergeant Dupree" and other officers attacked him for no
reason while he was handcuffed to a bench at the 8th District.

The suit alleges the lieutenant bragged about the beating, showing off his
knuckles to other officers.

Orleans Parish Prison told FOX 8 that, because of Driggers' injuries, the jail
refused to take him in so police took him to the hospital first.

Driggers
says, "I was taken to the hospital in an ambulance because I was knocked
unconscious. They took me in a waiting room and gave me a CAT scan, but if you
look at the police report that never shows up."

The federal suit also alleges the 8th District commander and another officer
tried to cover up the incident by allegedly destroying or attempting to
destroy surveillance video from the police station and falsifying the police
report.

NOPD's Public Integrity Bureau launched its probe shortly after the allegations
surfaced, then turned the case over to the Orleans Parish District Attorney's
office for further investigation into exactly what happened the night the
Alabama teen was arrested.

The charges against Driggers were public intoxication and simple battery on a
police officer. Those charges are being handled in Municipal Court.

The NOPD doesn't comment on pending litigation, but tells FOX 8 that the
alleged beating case is still being reviewed by the D.A.'s office.

After more than 14 days without phone service and the inability to use a medical alert system, a 96-year-old New Orleans woman's son turned to the FOX 8 Defenders for help. We got the family answers and action right away.

After more than 14 days without phone service and the inability to use a medical alert system, a 96-year-old New Orleans woman's son turned to the FOX 8 Defenders for help. We got the family answers and action right away.